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Kevin
July 12th 04, 01:42 AM
Hello, I am totally new to the car audio world. I have a '91 Stealth
which I like the stereo but I think I could add a sub to push it a
little more. I looked at this
http://www.jlaudio.com/amps/pdfs/SYS_5.pdf and according to it you
dont need a cable running to your battery because "The factory unit
drives the 500/1 through a parallel connection to its rear speaker
outputs." Am I correct on this? I would love to keep the original
radio/amp and use it to run the highs and mids and just have a mono
amp drive the subs. Would I have to run any wires throughout the car
besides the connections to the rear speakers? Would these cheaper
mono amps work the same way:
http://www.circuitcity.com/detail.jsp?c=1&b=g&u=c&catoid=-8865&qp=0&oid=69339&m=0
http://www.circuitcity.com/detail.jsp?c=1&b=g&u=c&catoid=-8865&qp=0&oid=70290&m=0

I am really interested to know more about this. Thanks for your help.

Kevin

mayhemkrew
July 12th 04, 04:25 AM
No you still have to run a power wire from the battery for this amp, the
section you posted was referring to how the amp can get a signal to it. If
you scroll down and look at the side view of the amp, on the left you can
see where the power wire and ground need to go.

"Kevin" > wrote in message
m...
> Hello, I am totally new to the car audio world. I have a '91 Stealth
> which I like the stereo but I think I could add a sub to push it a
> little more. I looked at this
> http://www.jlaudio.com/amps/pdfs/SYS_5.pdf and according to it you
> dont need a cable running to your battery because "The factory unit
> drives the 500/1 through a parallel connection to its rear speaker
> outputs." Am I correct on this? I would love to keep the original
> radio/amp and use it to run the highs and mids and just have a mono
> amp drive the subs. Would I have to run any wires throughout the car
> besides the connections to the rear speakers? Would these cheaper
> mono amps work the same way:
>
http://www.circuitcity.com/detail.jsp?c=1&b=g&u=c&catoid=-8865&qp=0&oid=69339&m=0
>
http://www.circuitcity.com/detail.jsp?c=1&b=g&u=c&catoid=-8865&qp=0&oid=70290&m=0
>
> I am really interested to know more about this. Thanks for your help.
>
> Kevin

Kevin Kapalla
July 13th 04, 02:32 AM
Thanks for your help. Do you think connecting a sub to the rear speakers
and mono amp powering the sub is a good idea?

Kevin

"mayhemkrew" > wrote in message
news:TwnIc.59679$%_6.29490@attbi_s01...
> No you still have to run a power wire from the battery for this amp, the
> section you posted was referring to how the amp can get a signal to it.
If
> you scroll down and look at the side view of the amp, on the left you can
> see where the power wire and ground need to go.
>
> "Kevin" > wrote in message
> m...
> > Hello, I am totally new to the car audio world. I have a '91 Stealth
> > which I like the stereo but I think I could add a sub to push it a
> > little more. I looked at this
> > http://www.jlaudio.com/amps/pdfs/SYS_5.pdf and according to it you
> > dont need a cable running to your battery because "The factory unit
> > drives the 500/1 through a parallel connection to its rear speaker
> > outputs." Am I correct on this? I would love to keep the original
> > radio/amp and use it to run the highs and mids and just have a mono
> > amp drive the subs. Would I have to run any wires throughout the car
> > besides the connections to the rear speakers? Would these cheaper
> > mono amps work the same way:
> >
>
http://www.circuitcity.com/detail.jsp?c=1&b=g&u=c&catoid=-8865&qp=0&oid=69339&m=0
> >
>
http://www.circuitcity.com/detail.jsp?c=1&b=g&u=c&catoid=-8865&qp=0&oid=70290&m=0
> >
> > I am really interested to know more about this. Thanks for your help.
> >
> > Kevin
>
>